David Jones (video game developer)
David Jones | |
---|---|
Born | David Scott Jones October 1965 (age 56) Dundee, Scotland |
Alma mater | University of Abertay Dundee |
Occupation | Video game designer |
Known for | Lemmings, Grand Theft Auto, Crackdown |
Children | 1 |
David Scott Jones (born October 1965) is a Scottish video game programmer and entrepreneur who co-founded video game developers DMA Design (now Rockstar North) in 1987, Realtime Worlds in 2002, and Cloudgine in 2012.[1] Jones created Lemmings and Grand Theft Auto,[2] which both spawned many successful sequels. He also created the Crackdown franchise for the Xbox 360 and Xbox One consoles, and the open-ended massively multiplayer online game, APB: All Points Bulletin.[3]
Biography[]
David Scott Jones was born in Dundee[4] in October 1965.[5] His career started with the indie game Menace, which he developed himself under the company name DMA Design and released in 1988. The game sold 15,000 copies and earned him £20,000, which he used to buy a car.[6] DMA Design expanded and went on to make a second game, Blood Money, which Jones saw as a "further development" of the concept used in Menace.[7] DMA created a third game in 1991, Lemmings, which was commercially and critically successful, resulting in awards including winning European Game of the Year twice. Over the next two years Lemmings sold over 2 million copies, making Jones, 25 years old at release and married with a child, wealthy and famous.[6]
DMA Design created several more games over the next few years, but Jones spent time on developing an idea for a fighting simulator set in a city; after the release of Syndicate Wars (1996), the company revised the concept to set it in a "living city" and cross it with a driving game, resulting in the successful and controversial Grand Theft Auto, which in turn sparked an entire franchise.[6] In 2012 Jones revealed that much of the controversy surrounding Grand Theft Auto was engineered by their publicist.[8] DMA Design was soon after acquired by Gremlin Interactive, starting a chain of purchases that resulted in the studio becoming Rockstar North. Jones stayed with the company through 1999 and Grand Theft Auto 2 before leaving.[9]
In 2000 Jones founded and led the Dundee studio of Rage Software, Rage Games (Scotland) Limited, where he developed the PC title Mobile Forces. Jones also co-founded Denki who developed for Rage. Rage ceased trading after bankruptcy.
In 2002 Jones founded Realtime Worlds, who developed Crackdown (2007) and APB: All Points Bulletin (2010).[10] Despite receiving funding of $100m Realtime Worlds entered liquidation in 2010 after the disappointing critical and commercial reception to APB.[11]
Jones was the keynote speaker for the World Cyber Games in 2004 where he said that he considered mainstream multiplatform gaming to be the next big thing,[12] and for the 2009 Develop Conference in Brighton.[13]
In 2012 David Jones started work on ChronoBlade, a Facebook action-RPG game, with Stieg Hedlund as part of San Francisco-based development team nWay.[14]
In 2012 he co-founded Cloudgine, a games development company focusing on cloud computing.[15]
In the same year Jones founded Reagent Games, serving as Creative Director, to lead the development of Microsoft Xbox One title Crackdown 3.[16]
In December 2017,[17] Cloudgine was acquired by Epic Games; with this, Jones became Director, Cloud Strategy for Epic Games, and resigned from Reagent Games.[18]
Works[]
- Menace (1988)
- Blood Money (1989)
- Lemmings (1991)
- Oh No! More Lemmings (1991)
- Lemmings 2: The Tribes (1993)
- Holiday Lemmings (1993)
- Hired Guns (1993)
- The Lemmings Chronicles (1994)
- Grand Theft Auto (1997)
- Body Harvest (1998)
- Space Station Silicon Valley (1998)
- Tanktics (1999)
- Grand Theft Auto 2 (1999)
- Mobile Forces (2002)
- Crackdown (2007)
- APB: All Points Bulletin (2010)
- Crackdown 3 (2019)
References[]
- ^ "Interview: The APB ABC Part 1 | Features". Edge Online. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
- ^ "David Jones Returns To APB | News". Edge Online. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
- ^ "News – GTA Creator Gets New Funding". Gamasutra. 8 December 2006. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
- ^ "Grand Theft Auto creator to mark 20 Years of Games". Abertay University. 10 November 2017.
- ^ "David Scott JONES". Companies House. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
- ^ a b c "Grand Theft Auto V: Games visionary behind Scotland's biggest cultural export". Daily Record. 15 September 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- ^ DMA Design, ed. (1989), Blood Money Instruction Booklet, Liverpool: Psygnosis, p. 12, archived from the original on 5 October 2015, retrieved 5 October 2015
- ^ Maxwell, Ben (22 October 2012). "Grand Theft Auto creators detail Max Clifford's engineered controversy". Edge. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
- ^ McLaughlin, Rus (28 March 2008). "IGN Presents: The History of Grand Theft Auto". IGN. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- ^ Welsh, Oli (12 March 2010). "Realtime Worlds' David Jones". Eurogamer. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- ^ Stuart, Keith (27 August 2010). "Realtime Worlds: an inside story". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 December 2011.
- ^ "GTA Creator David Jones keynotes World Cyber Games 2004 Conference". GameSpot. 7 October 2004. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- ^ Alexander, Jem (19 March 2009). "Develop 2009's speaker lineup partially unveiled". Joystiq. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- ^ Lahti, Evan (1 August 2013). "Why the creator of GTA and the lead designer of Diablo II are making a Facebook game together". PC Gamer. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
- ^ "Our Team". Cloudgine. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
- ^ Daws, Ryan (20 May 2014). "Cloudgine is Microsoft's secret Xbox One sauce". Developer Tech. Retrieved 12 June 2014.
- ^ "Person with significant control for Reagent Games Ltd". Companies House. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
- ^ Plante, Chris (20 June 2018). "Crackdown 3's original co-developer and series creator are no longer on the project". Polygon. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
External links[]
Media related to David Jones at Wikimedia Commons
- 1966 births
- Realtime Worlds
- British video game programmers
- Living people
- Alumni of Abertay University
- British technology company founders
- British video game designers
- People from Dundee